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Overview of Earth's Oceans: Size, Depth, and Exploration

This overview provides information on the significance of Earth's oceans, including their size, depth, and role in human exploration. Learn about the four principal oceans, the Seven Seas, and early navigators who ventured into the unknown.

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Overview of Earth's Oceans: Size, Depth, and Exploration

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  1. Overview • The world ocean is the most prominent feature on Earth. • Oceans cover 70.8% of Earth’s surface. • The origin and development of life on Earth are connected to the ocean. • The oceans have a long history on Earth.

  2. Earth’s Oceans • Oceans dominate Earth’s surface • Earth’s largest habitat • 97.2% of Earth’s surface water

  3. Earth’s Oceans • Earth has one ocean. • Divided into four principal oceans and one other. • Pacific Ocean • Atlantic Ocean • Indian Ocean • Arctic Ocean • Southern, or Antarctic, Ocean

  4. Ocean Size and Depth

  5. Earth’s Oceans • Pacific Ocean • World’s largest ocean • Accounts for more than half of Earth’s ocean space • World’s deepest ocean • Earth’s largest geographic feature • Named in 1520 by Ferdinand Magellan

  6. Earth’s Oceans • Atlantic Ocean • Half the size of the Pacific Ocean • Shallower than the Pacific Ocean • Separates the Old World from the New World • Indian Ocean • Smaller than the Atlantic Ocean • Similar depth as the Atlantic Ocean • Primarily in the Southern Hemisphere

  7. Earth’s Oceans • Arctic Ocean • Seven percent the size of the Pacific Ocean • Shallowest world ocean • Permanent layer of sea ice a few meters thick • Southern Ocean or Antarctic Ocean • Circumnavigates Antarctica • Is really the parts of the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans that lie south of 50°S latitude

  8. The Seven Seas • Smaller and shallower than oceans • Salt water • Usually enclosed by land • Sargasso Sea defined by surrounding ocean currents • Directly connected to the ocean

  9. The Seven Seas • Before the 15th century, Europeans considered the seven seas to be the following: • Red Sea • Mediterranean Sea • Persian Gulf • Black Sea • Adriatic Sea • Caspian Sea • Indian Ocean

  10. Ancient Seven Seas Map

  11. Comparing Oceans to Continents • Average ocean depth is 3682 meters (12,080 feet) • Average continental elevation is 840 meters (2756 feet) • Deepest ocean trench is the Mariana Trench at 11,022 meters (36,161 feet) • Highest continental mountain is Mt. Everest at 8850 meters (29,035 feet)

  12. Early Exploration of the Oceans • Early explorers used boats to seek new fishing grounds for food. • The ocean facilitated trade and interaction between cultures.

  13. Pacific Navigators • No human evolution on Pacific islands. • Populated by voyagers. • Polynesia • Melanesia • Micronesia

  14. Pacific People • No written records exist of Pacific human history before the 16th century. • Archeological evidence suggests island occupation by people from New Guinea as early as 4000–5000 B.C.

  15. Pacific People • Thor Heyerdahl sailed on a balsa raft - the KonTiki- to demonstrate migration of South Americans to Pacific Ocean islands.

  16. European Navigators • Phoenecians- first from Western Hemisphere to develop navigation arts • Navigated circa 2000 B.C. • Explored Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean • First circumnavigation of Africa • Reached the British Isles

  17. European Navigators • Greek Pytheas • Sailed northward using a simple method to determine latitude in 325 B.C. • Navigated using the North Star • Eratosthenes determined Earth’s circumference fairly accurately.

  18. Europeans • Herodotus produced inaccurate world map around 450 B.C. • Claudius Ptolemy produced fairly accurate world map around 150 A.D. • Erroneously updated Eratosthenes’ original circumference estimation, later causing Christopher Columbus to believe he had reached Asia

  19. The Middle Ages • Arabs dominant navigators in the Mediterranean Sea • Traded extensively with East Africa, India, and Southeast Asia • Learned to use Indian Ocean monsoon winds for travel

  20. The Middle Ages • Vikings explored North Atlantic Ocean • Settled Iceland and Greenland in 9th and 10th centuries A.D. • Leif Eriksson designated part of eastern Canada Vinland (now Newfoundland) in 995 A.D. • Greenland, Vinland settlements abandoned by 1450 A.D. due to climatic cooling

  21. The Middle Ages • Other Viking explorers • Erik “the Red” Thorvaldson- discovered Greenland • BjarniHerjólfsson- first to find Newfoundland

  22. Viking Routes and Colonies

  23. Search for new Eastern trade routes by sea Prince Henry the Navigator of Portugal sought trade routes around Africa. Europeans explore North and South America. Christopher Columbus was financed by the Spanish to find new trade routes to Asia. The Age of Discovery in Europe 1492–1522

  24. Spaniard Ferdinand Magellan circumnavigated the globe. Was killed on a Pacific Island in 1521 Juan Sebastian del Caño completed the circumnavigation in 1522. Voyages paved the way for the Spanish to take gold from the Incas and Mayas. Spain’s maritime dominance ended when England defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588. The Age of Discovery in Europe 1492–1522

  25. Voyages of Columbus and Magellan

  26. Italian Giovanni Caboto, also known as John Cabot -landed on northeastern coast of North America. Vasco Nuñez de Balboa- attempted land crossing at Isthmus of Panama. The Age of Discovery in Europe 1492–1522

  27. Voyaging for Science • The English wanted to retain maritime superiority. • Captain James Cook (1728–1779) undertook three scientific voyages. • Ships HMS Endeavour, Resolution, Adventure • Mapped many islands in Pacific • Systematically measured ocean characteristics • Marine chronograph (longitude)

  28. Cook’s Voyages

  29. Oceanography Continues • More high-technology tools available today • Sonar • Robotics • Computers • Satellites • NOAA - National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration

  30. What is Oceanography? • Scientific study of all aspects of the marine environment.

  31. Nature of Scientific Inquiry • Natural phenomena governed by physical processes • Physical processes similar today as in the past • Scientists discover these processes and make predictions. • Called the scientific method

  32. The Scientific Method

  33. Theories and Truth • Science never reaches absolute truth. • Truth is probable and based on available observations. • New observations yield scientific progress. • In reality, scientists have no formal method. • Theory - well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world.

  34. Formation of Earth and the Solar System • Nebular hypothesis - all bodies in the solar system formed from nebula • Nebula= cloud of gases and space dust • Mainly hydrogen and helium

  35. Nebular Hypothesis • Gravity concentrates material at center of cloud (Sun). • Protoplanets form from smaller concentrations of matter (eddies).

  36. Protoearth • Larger than Earth today • Homogeneous composition • Bombarded by meteorites • Moon formed from collision with large asteroid.

  37. Protoearth • Radioactive heat • Spontaneous disintegration of atoms • Fusion reactions • Heat from contraction (protoplanet shrinks due to gravity) • Protoearth partially melts • Density stratification (layered Earth)

  38. Solar System Today

  39. Density Stratification • High density = heavy for its size • Early Earth experienced gravitational separation. • High-density materials (iron and nickel) settled in core. • Less dense materials formed concentric spheres around core.

  40. Earth’s Internal Structure • Layers defined by • Chemical composition • Physical properties

  41. Layers by Chemical Composition • Crust • Low-density, mainly silicate minerals • Mantle • Mainly iron (Fe) and magnesium (Mg) silicate minerals • Core • High-density, mainly iron (Fe) and nickel (Ni)

  42. Layers by Physical Properties • Lithosphere • Asthenosphere • Mesosphere • Outer core • Inner core

  43. Lithosphere • Cool, rigid shell • Includes crust and upper mantle • About 100 km (60 miles) thick

  44. Asthenosphere • Relatively hot, plastic • Flows with high viscosity • Important for movement of lithospheric plates • Base of lithosphere to about 700 km (430 miles) deep

  45. Internal Structure of Earth

  46. Continental vs. Oceanic Crust

  47. Isostatic Adjustment • Vertical movement of Earth’s crust • Buoyancy of lithosphere on asthenosphere • Less dense continental crust floats higher than denser oceanic crust. • Isostatic rebound - rising of crust formerly weighed down by glacier ice

  48. Isostatic Adjustment

  49. Origin of Earth’s Atmosphere • Outgassing- occurred during density stratification • Water vapor • Carbon dioxide • Hydrogen • Other gases • Earth’s early atmosphere different from today

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